Each decade had memorable songwriters/singers/musicians. And each artist from whatever generation they came from was directly influenced by someone else, either from a period earlier in time, or by their current "peers."
It's the "best decade" part of the question that bothers me the most. What do you want to base this on? Your personal favorites? Some listing in Rolling Stone magazine? Actual record or cd sales? Developments in technology? Of course, most base their answers on the music they grew up listening to. It's as simple as that. I grew up in the 50's/60's. It was an interesting time, that's for sure. Does that mean that I think that the 50's or 60's were the best decade? No--not necessarily. BUT, if you want to base the answer to your question on the actual sales aspect of music (i.e., most played by dj's, most played in jukeboxes, best sellers in stores), then it simplifies the question an awful lot: the answer would be the 1960's. 1966 still holds the record for the number of songs that hit the Billboard Hot 100 charts. 743 songs hit the charts in 1966. Now, compare that to, let's say, 1994. In 1994, 336 songs hit the Billboard Hot 100 charts.
Breaking down just those numbers by year:
1955--248
1956--500
1957--483
1958--525
1959--576
1960--601
1961--681
1962--676
1963--658
1964--714
1965--718
1966--743
1967--738
1968--684
1969--689
1970--634
1971--620
1972--584
1973--530
1974--492
1975--561
1976--527
1977--468
1978--451
1979--475
1980--470
1981--408
1982--424
1983--452
1984--434
1985--404
1986--397
1987--398
1988--386
1989--392
1990--375
1991--385
1992--370
1993--345
1994--336 (my records stop here)
Now, what do those numbers actually show? Well, in a way, they show the rise and fall of AM Top 40 format radio. And if you dig really deep into those numbers, you can find the advent of FM radio and so so many changes within the medium itself.
The 1950's was the time for Tin Pan Alley, Brill Building song writers like Leiber-Stoller, Carole King, Neil Sedaka, and so many more. This was their true hey-day. Then, in 1964, along comes this British band called the Beatles, who began writing their own songs. More and more artists began writing their own stuff as well. That's where the real money was. Yeah, you got paid for recording and selling records, but the REAL money came from writer credits. That really began a new phase with the Beatles.
In my lifetime, I've watched as music went from 78's to 45's to stereo (1957) to albums to quadraphonic to 8-track tapes to cassette tapes to reel-to-reel to cd's to mp3's and flac files and whatever else is out there today. But that's really getting off topic.
I guess it all boils down to this for me: I cannot answer your question. Each decade has shown us all some great music, as well as innovations in technology. Take Fleetwood Mac for example. I began listening to Fleetwood Mac in 1968. Look at the changes just that one band went through. Did I like them in 1968? Yes. Did I like them in 1975? Yes. Did they play the same style of music in 1975 that they played in 1968? No. Were they as popular in 1968 as they were in 1975? No. Even though they'd been around in the 60's, they really didn't catch their "mass appeal popular" groove until 1975. Hell, that in itself is a lifetime for some bands that have come and gone.
I guess if I had to answer your question, I would honestly have to say "all of them."
Edited by Kronosis - 7/4/2009 at 05:08 am GMT
Edited by Kronosis - 7/4/2009 at 06:43 pm GMT
Edited by Kronosis - 7/4/2009 at 06:53 pm GMT